Valve introduces new Steam feature that tailors game suggestions to each player

Steam is introducing a new game recommendation system with the Personal Calendar. The feature shows players individually tailored new releases and upcoming titles based on their gaming behavior and wishlist data.
Personalized game recommendations
Valve has introduced “Personal Calendar” as part of the Steam Labs Initiative – an experimental feature that offers users a calendar-based overview of new releases. The system creates individual recommendations based on personal gaming behavior and is intended to provide guidance in the daily flood of new PC game releases. Steam now records over 14,000 new games per year, which makes it increasingly difficult for users to choose.

Steam analyzes playing time and user behavior
The Personal Calendar uses a recommendation algorithm that identifies users with similar gaming habits and evaluates their wish list activities. The system particularly weights titles in which players have invested many hours, while short test sessions or demo games have less influence on the recommendations. It is updated daily to reflect current trends and fresh releases. The system uses Steam’s extensive database, which includes information about playing times, purchasing behavior and community activities.
Weekday focus and different presentation
Steam deliberately limits the calendar view to working days, as game developers mainly publish their titles from Tuesday to Thursday. Weekend releases are rather unusual in the industry. Already released and upcoming games are presented differently: While future titles appear in a daily calendar view, games that are already available can be found in separate areas for the past week and month. However, all titles on the personal wish list are displayed automatically, regardless of the algorithmic rating.
Customizable filters and configuration
Users can vary the number of recommendations displayed between ten and 500 titles, with higher numbers tending to result in less targeted suggestions. The system respects existing store settings such as ignored products, excluded tags or filtering of early access titles.
The feature is also accessible without the Steam Beta Client and only requires you to log in to your Steam account. As a typical Steam Labs experiment, Valve collects user feedback via the community forums to further develop the functionality. The test phase is used to evaluate whether the feature will later be integrated into the regular Steam client.
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